[3] Simon Cadden was killed by local indigenous people in and was buried in a lone grave on the station.
Robertson built the present homestead in 1873, using sandstone from nearby Mt Melville in the Dundas Ranges.
Blocks were subdivided into approximately 900 acre sections, and leased to soldiers on the proviso that they were improved, fenced and cleared appropriately.
[7] In 1925 a soldiers' memorial hall was built in Gringegalgona to honour the fallen in World War One.
[10] Bil-Bil-Wyt closed in 1903 when the five families with the surname Brown who used the school all moved to Coleraine.
[11] Gringe North was closed in 1945 and the building was moved approximately five kilometres from its original location.
In January 2022 a bushfire was started in Gringegalgona after a red gum was set alight by lightning.